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Acomb featured in “Global Reach: Area Lawyer Specializes in International Litigation”

This is an article on Frederick Acomb authored by Sheila Pursglove of the Detroit Legal News. You can access the original article here or here, but, because it is difficult to read, we have reproduced it below:

For more than 20 years, attorney Fred Acomb has prosecuted and defended international arbitration and litigation matters around the globe.

“This area of the law is a great one for going places—literally,” says Acomb, a principal at Miller Canfield in Detroit and chair of the International Dispute Resolution Section. “I enjoy working with and against lawyers with legal and cultural traditions very different from my own. It keeps things fun, and the learning never stops.”

The fun and learning also provides a slew of anecdotes: such as when Acomb flew to Kuwait City and cross-examined for eight hours a member of the Al Sabah royal family, who was the former president of OPEC, a president of OPEC, finance minister of Kuwait, oil minister of Kuwait, and CEO of the Kuwait National Petroleum Co. “People called him. ‘Your Excellency,’ and there I was cross-examining him,” Acomb says.

In Istanbul, he endured a hair-raising taxi ride where the driver missed his freeway exit, and sped backwards for nearly a mile, swerving wildly to avoid the oncoming traffic. And in Shanghai, alone in a restaurant, Acomb tried to order from a menu that had no English or pictures. “I didn’ t speak Mandarin, they didn’t speak English, and lord knows what I ate that day. I still don’t know,” he says.

His command of German also leaves something to be desired. When giving a speech in Baden-Baden, and taking off his jacket in a warm room, he used a local colloquialism to explain why he w as disrobing. As soon as the words left his lips his audience erupted into laughter.

“As I stood there red-faced and confused, my host finally had mercy and whispered in my ear that I’d just confessed to something of a highly intimate nature,” he explains. “Since then I’ve stuck to English.”

“But our aspirations are higher—our aim is to be known globally as one of the finest international arbitration boutiques in the world, and we’re well on our way,” he says.

The IDR Section includes Professor Charles H. Brower II, who Acomb notes has a distinguished international reputation in the field, and a keen sense of strate gy and nuance in presenting inter national disputes. The team also includes Professor Troy Harris who, after years of practicing as an international construction arbitration specialist at King and Spalding in Atlanta, co-authored the seminal book on the field. The section also includes Larry Saylor, Paul Hudson, and Jamie Woolard, lawyers who Acomb describes as “among the best I’ ve ever known anywhere. Our section includes extraordinary lawyers who have defended and prosecuted inter national arbitrations before arbitration tribunals around the world,” Acomb says.

Routinely representing companies from outside the United States, most commonly from Canada, Mexico, Germany, China, Fin- land, Sweden, France, the United Kingdom, Japan, and Poland, his own cases include successfully prosecuting and defending competing claims for ownership rights in the largest reserve of brown coal in the world, located in New South Wales, Australia; and oil, gas, coal bed methane, and coal mine methane reserves in the United States. The amounts at issue exceeded $300 million (U .S.). The adverse parties were energy companies in Australia and Canada, and Acomb’s client was an energy company in the United States.

In another challenging case, after a full hearing in London before the ICC International Court of Arbitration, Acomb defeated a bet-the-company-division intellectual property claim brought by a Swiss corporation headquartered in the Isle of Jersey, U.K., against a U .S.-based engine manufacturer.

Acomb has successfully defended more than 70 international sales agency disputes on behalf of manufacturers headquartered in Germany, France, Italy, Sweden, Canada, China, Mexico, and the United States. He star ted in this specialty when he was a new lawyer, and filed a motion with the U.S. District Court for the Easter n District of Michigan asserting that a recently enacted sales commission statute—MCL 600.2961— violated the State Constitution. Judge George Woods granted the motion.

“The Sixth Circuit later reversed the ruling, and the reversal was well-publicized,” Acomb says. “Although I was the losing lawyer on appeal, they spelled my name right and you know what they say about that.”

“Program Director Professor Greg Fox has done an extraordinary job at elevating the program to some prominence,” he says. “One-third of Wayne Law’s tenured and tenure-track faculty teach and write on international subjects and enjoy worldwide reputations as innovative and prolific scholars, publishing on the most important issues of the day.”

As a kid who came from the “wrong side of the tracks” in Fresno, Calif., Acomb is a big proponent of pro bono work.

“Like everyone else in the neighborhood, my family could have used a good lawyer from time to time—the poor are vulnerable in ways the wealthy will never fully comprehend,” he says. “Good lawyers level the playing field like little else. Pro bono work gives me an opportunity to make a real difference in the lives of people who need legal help just to survive. A fight over a couple hundred dollars can make the difference between food and shelter versus not.”

Acomb and his wife, Mandy Fishburn—a copywriter supervisor at Lowe Campbell Ewald—make their home in Birmingham, where he unwinds from work by learning to play guitar, practicing nearly every night. The couple has five children, ranging in age from 3 to 24.

“I have a sister who suffers from bipolar disorder. Were it not for the extraordinary kindness of the professionals at a community mental health organization very much like Detroit Central City Community Mental Health, she probably wouldn’t be with us today,” he says. “Contributing to Detroit Central City is the least I can do. Advocating for good mental health care is the least I can do. I have my sister, and I’m so thankful for that.”

For more about Miller Canfield’s International Disputes Group click here.